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A Computational Approach to Statistical Learning gives a novel
introduction to predictive modeling by focusing on the algorithmic
and numeric motivations behind popular statistical methods. The
text contains annotated code to over 80 original reference
functions. These functions provide minimal working implementations
of common statistical learning algorithms. Every chapter concludes
with a fully worked out application that illustrates predictive
modeling tasks using a real-world dataset. The text begins with a
detailed analysis of linear models and ordinary least squares.
Subsequent chapters explore extensions such as ridge regression,
generalized linear models, and additive models. The second half
focuses on the use of general-purpose algorithms for convex
optimization and their application to tasks in statistical
learning. Models covered include the elastic net, dense neural
networks, convolutional neural networks (CNNs), and spectral
clustering. A unifying theme throughout the text is the use of
optimization theory in the description of predictive models, with a
particular focus on the singular value decomposition (SVD). Through
this theme, the computational approach motivates and clarifies the
relationships between various predictive models. Taylor Arnold is
an assistant professor of statistics at the University of Richmond.
His work at the intersection of computer vision, natural language
processing, and digital humanities has been supported by multiple
grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the
American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). His first book,
Humanities Data in R, was published in 2015. Michael Kane is an
assistant professor of biostatistics at Yale University. He is the
recipient of grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
DARPA, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. His R package
bigmemory won the Chamber's prize for statistical software in 2010.
Bryan Lewis is an applied mathematician and author of many popular
R packages, including irlba, doRedis, and threejs.
A Computational Approach to Statistical Learning gives a novel
introduction to predictive modeling by focusing on the algorithmic
and numeric motivations behind popular statistical methods. The
text contains annotated code to over 80 original reference
functions. These functions provide minimal working implementations
of common statistical learning algorithms. Every chapter concludes
with a fully worked out application that illustrates predictive
modeling tasks using a real-world dataset. The text begins with a
detailed analysis of linear models and ordinary least squares.
Subsequent chapters explore extensions such as ridge regression,
generalized linear models, and additive models. The second half
focuses on the use of general-purpose algorithms for convex
optimization and their application to tasks in statistical
learning. Models covered include the elastic net, dense neural
networks, convolutional neural networks (CNNs), and spectral
clustering. A unifying theme throughout the text is the use of
optimization theory in the description of predictive models, with a
particular focus on the singular value decomposition (SVD). Through
this theme, the computational approach motivates and clarifies the
relationships between various predictive models. Taylor Arnold is
an assistant professor of statistics at the University of Richmond.
His work at the intersection of computer vision, natural language
processing, and digital humanities has been supported by multiple
grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the
American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). His first book,
Humanities Data in R, was published in 2015. Michael Kane is an
assistant professor of biostatistics at Yale University. He is the
recipient of grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
DARPA, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. His R package
bigmemory won the Chamber's prize for statistical software in 2010.
Bryan Lewis is an applied mathematician and author of many popular
R packages, including irlba, doRedis, and threejs.
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